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The Huron News-Record, 1894-10-03, Page 6Flammerly, a well-known businessman Of Hillsboro Va., sends thIs testimony to the merits otiiiyer's Sarsaparilla: "Several years ago, r hurt my leg, the tnjury leaving a sore which led to erysipelas. My sufferings Were extreme, my log, from the knee to the ankle, being a solid sore, which began to ex- tend to other parts 01 the body, Atter trying various remedies, began taking liyer'S Sarsaparilla, and, before / had finished the first bottle, I experienced great rellefi the Second bottle effected a complete cure."0 JAyer's Sarsaparilla Prepared by Hr. J. C. A yet & Co., Lowell, Hass. Cures others,vvill cure you The Huron News-Recora 1.60 a Year—C,25 in Advance. PROAIISE UNDER STRESS The Comtesse de Moncley4- whir will soon chane her name, as you shall see -is one ot the imaginable, aid also one of the lever oat I have ever !net. From the very first day she knew precisely how to avoid any exaggeration that could be considered bad taste in the expression herof sorrow,°it~ahoteexme and -without the her in her widows's weeds think she must wear rod satin under hor crape.Eary Parriis!apartment ri/swhehe re d no t had set feet since her husband and it was only by amide week later I discovered the ad had so careful; concealed tiro one. It was "Sycamore Villa ly." On May I there might h seen to arrive'at a little bit of situated at a convenient dista Sycamore Villa, several trunks, lish cart and a pony, a saddle a bull terrier, Iwo servants an bordering on 80. That man elf. I hasten to add that, in this stance, I acted solely at my o and peril, without any autho whatever, and with no other than my love -my profound prompt me to hope that my change of domicile would not be a dead loss. Ah, well -nothing venture, nothing win. tl a what ayy.! oto , the Grand Pr'ixl,i The mob in the Alice des Poteaux, a few balls - what were they in comparison with the charms of a most attractive neighbor- hood ? I have known men to cross the seas and spend fortunes to follow to the ends of the earth an adventuress whose body was not worth the tf Mine. de Moncley's little finger. Clarisse's pretty anger w en I pre- sented myself at her house, on the day WEDNESDAY, OCTonER 3rd, 1894, of my arrival was 11ay first delightful recompense. In spite of her grand air, I saw that she was touched, anti I doubt if ever lover experienced so much pleasure in being shown the door by a retty woman. She took her time about it, too, and only pushed me into the street after a regulation philippic, to which I listened very humbly, replying only so much as was necessary to lengthen the lecture, which concluded in these words : "And now you will do mo the favor to return to Paris, The train leaves in an hour." "An "This is herder Nine to slip t'woihorse and a carriage, and throw up a lease--" ''What is this !" she cried. "A lease! You have presumed to -go sir ! What audacity ! A lease ! And, if you please, where is your house ?" has- tened"A long to replydistance ;tn at the othfrom er end oftheforest. .I am sure it must have taken me fully three-quarters of an hour to come here." To be precise, it had taken me about five minutes. • "To think," she exclaimed, "what a poor woman, deprived of her protector, is exposed to ! You would not have I am here with the prophets whose dared to do this if my husband were still warnings alive. And to think that he considered In the golden eternity fall; you his best friend ! Poor Charles!" I am here with the good Physician "He has never had any cause to com- Who healeth both great and small; plain," I murmured. "Let us talk to - I am here with the great soul -masters ; gether of him." And sorrow, greater than all. "Never !" • "Then let us talk of ourselves • that will be better still." ' This suggestion shocked her so that it took me a 1l'ong time to calm her. Final- ly she did not wish to let me go without having sworn never to set foot in her house again. It is needless to say that it took half an hour to persuade me to make this promise -which I broke the next morning and as often as possible. I pass over the months that fllowed, merely declaring that in this vale of tears there is no more happy lot than that of such an unhappy lover as I was. Clarisse had the most adorable way of .annihilating me with a look from her blue eyes -eyes that were intended for quite a:notherpurpase then annihilating fall on my kneeshenever she sbefore her, and Iaw that I was ii est confess she saw it at least ten tines during every visit I made her, still in despite of her express prohibition. And when I so far forgot myself as to tell her that if the•fntent were as good as the deed, the late lamented ought to have a heavy grudge against "his best friend," seeing that I loved his wife mad_sy from the very first. "Not another word," she would say, severely; " you blaspheme against friendship. Poor Charles !" And pit lessl1yestophmy dimpled sona that, if I had followed my inclination, I Would have blasphemed from mort.ing till night like the worst traitor to friendship in the world. The day she left off crape I profited bit seemed toccasions-naturally o pemyself' in liset terms as a candidate to succeed poor Charles. That evening -it was a June evening and the acacias made the most of the power which certain vegtables possess of intoxicating one with their perfume -that evening her hand did not stop my 'mouth at all ; it reached for the bell. Clarisse did not threaten this time• she acted. I saw that I was on the point of being put out by her servants, who con- sisted of an old woman who had been her nurse, and whom I could hare bowie$ over with a breath. However, it was no time for airy persiflage. Without wait- ing for Nancy to seize me by the collar, I took my hat and fled. • When day broke I had not closed my eyes; not that the situation seem- ed desperate, for I had learned to read Clarisse's eyes. But all night long I had repeated over and over again to myself: "Heaven grant that the little hotel in the Avenue Friedland is still for sale ! We would be so,comtortable there," In spite when ember came, I was no itherlad- vancedt month of my lease. I was no longer showh the door when I spoke of my candidacy ; but Clarisse assumed a bored air and calmly talked of something else. her she Between the. hell, fors'I I divined ld what she was thinking. "My dear friend, you do not displease me; quite the contrary. But you must I have scarcely had ;the opportunityito enjoy my widowhood. Let me see if it is really worthy of its reputation. In a year In a year ore can two !ePre oflk your charm- ing as she was, Claris a would have a score of adorers around her; and adorers around the woman one wants to marry are like flies in milk ; they may do no Ieft her ma e visitor 's death, nt that a dress she m every Chantil- ave been a house, nee from an Eng - horse, d a man was my- i tn, But instead of getting in she fell back circum- almost fainting, in my arms. Here is wn risk what she had seen, and what I, too, had rization seen, ever her shoulder: The seats of motive the compartment were unoccupied, and love-tothree men, perched like monkeys on the g back of the seats, held to their shoulders three n the glampligh treof liketcanr cannons.s Otte of them, as we opened the door, had shout- ed in a terrible voice: "Don't come in, for--" I had closed the door so quickly that we had not heard the end of the sen- tence. Then Clarisse and I handled ourselves into the next compartment without quite knowing what eve were doing. The train was already under Mon - cloy way. seemed half' dead with fear,ne. r,o andi I must confess I was badly shaken. "Did ,you see them?" she cried, "What cat, be happening in that com- partmeit? They are going to fight -to kill each other! What terrible tragedy IS to be enacted right beside us?" "I don't understand it at all," I re- plied. "Only ono explanation seems possible to me. They are huifters who have suddenly gone crazy. Otherwise whIf they simplyewanted tclimb o kill each on the seats? they could do it without all those gymnastics." "Not"stig'geeted'Clarisse ; "ft is some dreadtul Americas kind of a duel. In such a these, it seems, they climb up on anything they can find. But why didn't they stop them at Chantilly?" "Tile train Itself scarcely stopped "Dithere," 'Donto omeou in?'r hThew they wretches; they don't want to be disturbe.i while they are killing themselves. Goodness! Just listen !`' The fusillade had commenced right beside us ; several gunshots had sound- ed, dominated by a shrill, piercing cry, which still rings in my ears. Then a deathly silenceensutcf. They were all dead, however bad shots they might have been. Though we were making about fifty iniles an hour at the time, Imade ready to get out upon the step and find out what was going on in our neighbors' compartment. As I lowered the window two arms seized nee and a voice broken with anguish, but which sounded very sweet just the same, gasped behind me: 'Philip , if you love me do not go? They will kill you!" It was precisely like the fourth act of "The Huguenots, ' except that my name is not Ititoul. I saw the and I resolved to pxottit by it.age of my I situation, by it so well that, after a dialogue too intimae to be repeated here, I was in a position to siug-if I had had a voice which I haven't-"Thou-ou least said it ?" For she had said it. Poor Charles was distanced now. She had said the sweet words: "I love you !" A prey to emotions bordering on the hysterical Clarisse sobbed and clung to me with all her strength, though I had not the faintest desire to intrude on the massacre next door. They could kill themselves at their ease. Let every man attend to his own affairs. As for nee, I Was very much occupied just then. That is why, early the next morning. I hurried to my lawyer to speak to him about the enue Friedland, which hotel , s still for sale sa ee 4; but thank fortune, is now no longer. in the market. Decorators and furnishers are at work in it, and when January conies you will see it occupied by a certai uld young couple that I know of. But let us not anticipate. When the train pulled into the city niy conpanlon and I had quite forgotten our neigh- bors, or what was left of them ; but now the authorities must be infhrmcd and the bodies removed. I had jumped out and was looking for a sergeant de villa+ when I heard the door of the famous compartment open, and three hunters calmly descend from it, carrying rolled up in a rug, an inert mass which looked as if it might be the body of a young child. Without a moment's hesitation I seized, one of the assassins by the col lar. "Scoundrel!" I cried; "what have you got in that rug?" "Don't make such a row," he replied, "or we will have a hundred people at our backs. It is only rey poor dog." "Dog," I repeated, indignant at the man's coolness. "Colne, conte, you can't deceive me; I saw it all." My captive, whom I still held by the collar, opened the corner of the rug and showed me a setter's muzzle, with flecks of foam on it, dappled with blood. I dropped my hold on the man's collar in the greatest confusion. "Really, I scarcely know how to apologized" I said. "tut, frankly, it is not astonishing that I Should have been deceived -three men crouching on the seats of the carriage and shooting-" "Still, the explanation is very simple. My dog was bitten throe weeks ago. I had the wound cauterized and thought the animal was saved. We had been hunting all day near Breit; but no sooner were we on the train than hydrophobia developed and the animal began to snap at us. "To attempt to put the beast out was to tempt death, and there was nothing for it but for us to climb upon the seats and shoot the dog. We were not able to do so until after we left Chantilly, for, the poor brute had taken refuge under the seat. Finally,by calling ler-persuad- ed it to put its head out,and then we shot it. I ell, you, It's a trip we shall not soon forget.' shall I " I replied, and I rejoin- ed Clarisse, who was waiting for me at a little distance, and whose curiosity ay treat h rm, but they certainly do not In rove the milk. Early ineSepternber lime. de Moneley informed Inc one day that sl -e was going to Paris on the morrow to have a 'loolc at her apartments, •'I sincerely hope," she added in a severe tone,"that you do not think of accompanyng Intel' „How can you suggest such a tuna," said I, with apparent submission. "You leave at—" not wish to be a en. I shall send Nas ancy in the afternoon to prepare my room. Al, poor Paris!" admit thate no ° Fes"Poor id "Poor aris!" madelme much more uneasy. The next eveniug at 8 o'clock the doors of the express train which stops hardly it minute, were already closed. Clarisse had not appeared. She reached the station just as the bell rang. "Quick! Hurry up, madame!" cried the railroad official. "Hurry !" I repeated, opening a compartment at randorh and helping her Without and Within. Go away to the world's wild hubbub ; I cannot go with thee, For the deep home -anchors hold ine From the waves of that yeasty sea, Where, the sun my fresh sail gilding, We Since held company. If the vain and the silly hind thee, I cannot unlock thy chain ; If sin and the senses blind thee, Thyself must endure the paen ; If the arrows of conecience find thee, Thou must conquer thy peace again. Here the line that runs between its Is narrow, but black as nighti Faith sits passive this Side the border, More happy, perhaps, than sight; And I wring me slow drops of comfort Where I once drank swift delight. For I sit, here with love-lorn Tasso; With Dante, hooded and crowned; While, further, the classic satyrs Beat the old Virgilian ground; And I ha,rk for the Flaccian lyre, Till spirit comes back for sound. to do. -Julia Ward Howe. Why Eye had no Maid. NO SEWING, NO WASHING, AND SHE HAD • A. HELPFUL HUSBAND. The question has been frequently asked -by man, of course-vt-hy the Creator, when he relieved Adam of a ih a nd fashioned Eve therefrom, did not cake another spare rib, while about t, and make a maid for Eve? The answer is simple enough. Eve nad no use for one. Adam built the fire if any was built, and likewise dng turnips, pared potatoes and chopped wood. Then he never came along grumbling about holes in his stockings that needed darning. He didn't wear that kind. Then he never ripped the buttonholes off his shirt -for obvious reasons ; and his fig -leaf unmention- ables were never aciorned with those vexations to the spirits -unruly but, tons ; consequently Eve had no sewing • The only napkins and towels used were leaves, and these never required washing ; neither did Adam have any collars or cuffs to be laundered. He miked the cow himself, and likewise fed the chickens, without any outside help. In short he did his duty like einem, and did not labor under the deluehm that Eve was his inferior, hut equal and helpmate. -Truth. Feedink on Human Remains. A DOG POUND FEASTING ON THE PLESII OF A MAN OR WOMAN. The residents of North Toronto are in a state of excitement over the finding of the left arm and shoulder of a human body. On Saturday week the 13 -year-old , son of Mr. Edwards, Eglinton avenue, was haying his, usual run With his dogs in the bush on Glenwood averme, east of Davisville. After being out for some thne the doge got away from hini and he ret•urned home without them. A shore time afterwards Mr. Edwards went out to his faten and discovered the dogs there feeding on a huge bone. Mr. Edwards at first thought it was the remains of a sheep that the dogs had killed, but after driving them off he was hortified to discover that it wits human flesh the animals bad been eating. The arin and shoulder blade are either that of a woman or a small boned man. Those who have seen it declare that whoever the arm belonged to could not have been dead very long. Coroner Arinstrong was notified ,af the find, and it is likely will order a search to be made for the remaining part of the body. The arm was put in a box, and is now in the police station at North To - The dogs were taken to the bush again in the hope they would make foe where the remaining, part of the body must be, but as they returned without making any new discovery it is 'thought the arm may have been found in some other out of the way place, when the dogs were missing. The shoulder blade has unquestion- ably been torn from the body, evident- -1y hy the dogst so that the body must be in the vicinity of North Toronto. was vastly excited to see mo thus polite-, ly take leave of the assas#itts, lit- tle face when I she i herrn thebstoriy, "that doesn't count. I take back what I said." But at the same time she softly squeezed my arm with her own, and I saw in her eves that "that" did "count." -From the French. WANTED ---A IIUSBAND, boon seenlallvthe summeronnmight fouhrth page of a prominent journal : WANTED --A young lady residing In the provinces, pretty and distieguished, with a dot of 800,000 francs, desires to marry a gentleman of about thirty -flue or leg ti ssion prefer red, who resides in no agencies, Address MADELINE box No. 883, this office. Elodie Rabotteau, the party r to, was a young lady, to be sure, so still, more's the pity. She also in the country still, for her fat! i ,ledge at St. Colombau, an obscur in the canton of Beaute, second, she vas not ahe t as all not ed ; third, the above mentioned +'secs are principally expec corn her uncle -a, bachelor, it is rut scarcely forty years of ago, an s a rock. As to the ` no agencies," that ase deception. ' M. T. T., box vas in reality, Theodore Ta •'hose trade it was to arrange meal bargains. "•Tardieel has written me a ion er," said Judge Itabotteeu to his ne morning last autumn. "H, is plan : The army rnanceuvres epee a week from now, and St. C an has been designated to pi carters for a half battery of art, "This half' battery is comrnande aptain Leomte, and Captain Le, ishes to marry a young lady wi een brought up in the counery do think of anything but makin use look its best. We must h cond girl, too, so that the coo t have to wait on the table," "Goodness!" gasped Mme, Retbot what an expense!' •`I do not deny that it is quite a derabe outlay. But do you or d. ^t want Elodie married? She's tw x now, and forthe past eight yeti < ve offered her to every back een or ripe, in the eountry'roun " nothing of widowers, -Now a cl, ars itself, and we crust protit i shall go and fix it with the m that they quarter the' captai When Sentcniber 1 Damn ca "Merciful heavens; Itehe wounded?" "No. mademoiselle," replied the order- ly,with a peculiar smell°. "The captain's health is i11 state quo. But you d bet- ter tell your papa pot to keep the soup waiting for him." "Isn't he coining to dinner?" dinner' at tdhemWhiterHauseinn, endhewill Bleep there afterward. lam to fesch his things, as soon as I have unsaddled the mare." The dinner of the trio was most mel• ancholy. Bright and early the next day Rabot• teau sought out the landlord of the White Horse, who was much flurried by the presence of a dozen officers deli grades. "Can you tell," the judge asked, "if the artillery captain who was quartered at my house---" ellre.rilmici" is still in his room, for the mancout resides dellttirilo"tteau ascended the stairs, , take you up myself. I am rushec ended last night. Excuse me if I do and is strode clown the long corridor, on wli e town cept for the large numerals painted pretty ; them In bleck. He wasjust in the act of knocking aguish- that which bore the figure 8, when s 80u.,000 denly he reeolled as if he had seen tatter's tiger crouching on the mat. Howey true, it was not a tiger that he had seen. d solid was, by Ihe side of a pair of top -boo Ale armed with spurs, a little pair 383," dainty, elegant, impertinent bottin rdivel, bottines of which one would say witho metre fear of of being mistaken. "The foot a wire t'At that moment the key was heard to .0cvoimde. was seen to open, timidly, just the least First a hand emerged, very small and very white, the hand that belonged to ed, round and slender, with a pretty gaNvotewhae, and longer-Rabotteau had never in his plump arnevehich g.reev longer ire has k will life seen such an arm as that, and, if the other were like it, as all experience would indicate, this scoundrel of a Le- te:comte was a very lucky scoundrel la- 111: deiredaw. ever, the arm, the wrist, the you hand and the bottinos retreated and the judge stood there, fear's, very foolish, but there was nothing fo7 irtlotr.t; him to do but to go back to his own house. by On the table the judge found this mis ayor n on I don't understand this at all. You pretend to have Lecomte there with nnon yrou. But he writes me that he has b oken his leg, and that one of his com owo an s, planation. reties has taken his place in the manceu vers. Pray send me some word of ex • "This is too much I" cried Elodie's ridatime, and he never denied the name. If 1- I were you I would write to the minister Enough, that afternoon the false Le- comte knocked at the gate. But -climax way of impudencel-on his arm was a young htihtee and very pretty woman-doubt:4s the Vustine!" cried Mme. Rabotteau, "do not open the gate!Tell those persons we nto are not at home." At that mornent Justine returned.car- ow rving a card on which was inscribed; al- tillerie." et - Beneath was written in pencil: ook excuses for having in issed your coin - led pally last evening. Mine. de' Prehois of mune down and took me by surprise, ig, and did not wieh to seem inconsiderate les by increasinsr the trouble my prese»ce ain has caused you. It would have afford - its ed her great pleasure to make the ac- d- quaintance of your wife and (laugh- ter. Allow me to express My sincere at erratitude for your excellent _ eosei_ n- -From the French, Ain not 1 to ind ex- on at a It ts, ut of a ho ee ho si si gr off it. so SOU ea an the an wh ry pai cia De wa fell MU Elo bur a lo am read lug Th han to th Eke blus from was of th mini TI he w but that sul t. perso know the all - At retire Mme. ing j under In t capta the ju break new r sar. Lee to pia. young cepted Mende with u Elect ecstasi could her sh A co erectly marryi litely added officere if possi That ilv slep husban breakin tentiou He ha Leco hint ? mietty woman was in that not lotig AndsTardivel had replied : Pretend to know nothing about it. When he comes back will see him. I will manage the whole affair. However, the last day of the manceu- vers had come. That evening the Itabot- teen kitchen was nerved for a supreme effert, destined to all appearances, to be crowned with success. But, alas! at the accustomed hour rthe criptain's•horse was brotetieht back to the stable by his orderly. Elodie. who was watching for the return of her future husband -they celled him so already arnOng' themselves -from behind the blinds, flew to the garden and cried out in anguish : New Postcards. A curious instance of the influence of . public pressure upon official conservet- ism is afforded by the success of the de- mand in England for. postcoards not of government manufacture. For various retisons it would be a convenience to the public to be allowed to use its own cards Affixing to them the proper government stamp. It is obvious that this would also be to the pecuniary advantage of the postoffice. It would profit by saving the cost of the postal card, for which it now makes no charge to the public, and it would lose only by the insignificant cost otinaking the stamp. As the exist- ing postal cards coulds still be obtained be -those who confereed them. it would SOCM that no one could possibly complain. The post -office, however, has sturdily replied. to those who urged this concession that there were difficul- ties in the way of it which could not be ties were it was impoasible to find out. At alrevents, they have been overcome for the postoflice now announces that cards of the prescribed weight and size will henceforth be admitted to the mails when the proper stamp has been affixed. Since the expenditure ef the depart- ment is increasing faster than its res venue, a saving effected without ex- pense by yielding to a popular dernand may not be unwelcome. -New York Post. straereereree in merest, The Canadian wild strawberries, that most delicious of all fruitseippears to be developing a penchant to bear at wide- ly different seasons of the year. Recent- ly while Messrs. U. H. Kckimm, Joseph Bourke,Patrick Connors and Joseeh Dow were returning from a fishing trip to Sheen Trout lake they arrived at Hayes' wharf sometime before the steatner Ottawa reached that point. While waiting they rambled around the grove, and quite near to the wharf came upon a patch of ripe wild straw- berries, as bright and luscious as if the season had been late June. Each gather- ed some, and quite a number were brought home for friends, • The above quartette of gentleman had a successful time at the lake, having gathered in a considerable number of- speckled beau- ties of large dimensions. -Pembroke 1, was Mutual. Pater (entering room) - Phur-r-r What, do you mean, sir by thus em- bracieg my daughter ? Ethel, I am sugibigied(bravely)-go are we, poppa, dear, so are we. -Truth. GaNAT C,)r:G RM 7 curl Throat;', 1 ooUic f i lYWCouopla,Cro p lz Asthma. For Consumption it hag no rival has cured thousands, and will Ctalla Tpp if Lakonia time. Sold by Druggists oq t► guar. ante°. For a Laino Beek or Cit u0e SHILOH'S BELLADONNA PLAST ,9Nc, 5 cATA 11 REM are you Luta= r Tide remedy is Demme:ma arises from wrong action of the stomach, liver, and bowels. Burdock Blood Bitters eures Dyspepsia and all dieettses arising from it, 99 tinies in 100. Fifty lives lost and much destruction of property is the record of a cyclone in Lowe and Minnesota on Saturday. Some people laugh to eshow their pretty teeth. The use of tvory White Tooth Powder makes people laugh more than ever. It's so nice. Price 25c. Sold by druggists. That Canada has in the Northwest the largest coal deposits in the world is alrendy known and the indications now are that we have there the most extensive supply of petroleum also. We are just beginning to understand something of the extent of the resources of our territories beyond the great lakes, and should be ready to assume the duty of development thali goes with possession. DYSPEPSIA "causes Dizziness, Head ache, Constipation, Variable Appetite, Rising and Souring of Food, Palpita- t,ation of the Heart, Distress after Eat- ing. Burdock Blood 13itters is guaran• teed to cure Dyspepsia if faithfully used according to directions. At Mount Sterling, Ill., Ralph Conk- lin, a boy of eighteen years, single - heeded robbed the Bloomfield Skyles Bank and compelled the cashier to hand over $441. The money was re- covered and Conklin was gaoled. FOR CHOLERA MORBUS, Cholera In - fan turn, °ramps, Colic, Diarrlicert, Dysentery, and Summer Complaint, Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Straw- berry is a prompt, safe and sure cure that has been a popular favorite for over 40 -years. William Allen, of St. Marys, aged de, was arrested at London the other day and kept in the eel's all night for tee offence of looking through the fenceVf the Western Fair grounds. Allen said the reason he looked through the fence was because he needed all the money he bad for the care of his family through the winter. The magistrate dismissed the rase. Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Straw- berry cures Diarrh cea, Dysentery, Cramps, Colic, Cholera Morbus, Cholera Infantum, rind all louseness of • the bowels. Never travel without it. Price sec. The Conservatives of East Huron will meet in convention at Gorrie on October 1 to select a candidate for the BOON To HonsEctutc.—One bottle of English apavin Liniment completely removeil a curb from my horse. I take pies sure in recommending the remedy. Ss ft acts with mysterioug promptness in the re- Inoval from horses of hard, soft or calloused lumps, !nod apathr, splints, curbs, stymy, stifles and bprains Oconoz Rows, Farmer, Markham, Ont, Sold by Watts & Co. and Allen & Wilson, Druggiaka. Mr. Justice Osier on Saturday decid- ed that a deposit of security is not ne- eessary in the case of a cross election DEAR SIRS. -I have used Yellow Oil for two or three years, and think it ha,s no equal for croup. Mrs. J. S. O'Brien, Huntsville, Out. The body of Philip Pnwers, who was drowned in the Detroit River on the leth inst., has been recovered. IT'S DANGEROUS GROUND that you stand on -e -with a cough or a cold, and your blood impure. Out of just these conditions conies Consump- tion. You must do something. In the earlier stages of Consumption, and in all/gs the conditions that leads to it, Doctotere Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery is a certain remedy. This scrofulous affec- tion of the lungs, like every other form of Scrofula, can be mired by it.. In severe, lingering Coughs, all Bronchial, Throat and Lung Affections, and every disease that can ne. reached through the blood. it is the only medicine so effect.ive that it, cnn be guaranteed. If it dosen't benefit or cure, you have your money back. Nervous . prostra- don. and debility are conquered by it. Joseph Truskey has been sentenced - to be hanged on December 14, for the murder of Constable Lindsay et Com- TiNELISCATION COPIED IN • DAY. —South America Rbenmatic Cnre, for Rheumatism and Neuralgia radically cures in 1 to 8 days. Its action upon the opium IN remarkuble and inyaterieue. It removes at once the cause and the disease immediately dis appears. The first dose greedy benefice. 75 ciente Sold by Watts et Co. ans A/len & Wilson, Doggiest. ,,e‘ The Manitoba Patrons of Industry propose shipping their wheat direct to England. Owing to the scarcity of school teachers in Manitoba many country schools are closed. - "For several remitter, was troubled with a persistent brunet- on my head until it occurred to me to try Ayer's Heir Vigor. Before lifting one bottle, the humor was healed."- T. T. Adams, ) General Merchant, Tuberville Va.